Camelina - An Oil-Seed Crop For Different Bio-fuels
posted by Mak @ 1:43 AM | Friday, February 27, 2009 0 Comments
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After two years of collaboration Vancouver-based Nexterra Energy, developer of biomass gasification systems, has partnered with GE Energy to create modular biomass combined heat and power (CHP) plants of between 2 and 10 megawatts in size. Nexterra has optimized its system to work with GE’s Jenbacher high-efficiency gas engines. Specifically, it has upgraded the syngas that comes out of its system so that it meets the fuel specifications of the Jenbacher engine.
Labels: camelina
Great Plain, the “world’s largest Camelina producer” claim that it’s ‘virtually’ 100% efficient and a sustainable, low-input, biofuel feedstock that can help to combat rising emissions while also adding to food production and crop yields. It seems that the crop may boast a number of key advantages as a biofuel source since:
Labels: Biodiesel, Chinese Tallow, Companies
Some researchers estimate that kudzu could produce 2.2 to 5.3 tons of carbohydrate per acre. This translates to 270 gallons of ethanol per acre, comparable to the ethanol yield of corn of 210 to 320 gallons per acre. In other terms, 900 to 2500 liters of ethanol can be produced per hectare of kudzu, compared to 2000 to 3000 liters per hectare of corn.
Labels: Kudzu
Labels: Biodiesel, Chinese Tallow
Just recently on the Discovery Channel website, there was an article about using kudzu for making ethanol. This article gave another Approval for Kudzu as a Potential Biofuel and could be part of the biofuel solution to making America less dependent on oil.
Labels: Kudzu
Labels: Kudzu
Labels: Biodiesel, Chinese Tallow
At the biodiesel confab in San Francisco, experts discuss ways to grow fuel in the desert and Ben Franklin's contribution to alt fuels.
Labels: biofuel, Chinese Tallow
Mr. Doug Mizell, co-founder of Agro Gas Industries in Cleveland, Tennessee and company co-founder, Tom Monahan, have dubbed the kudzu-based-ethanol, “Kudzunol.” Kudzu is an obvious resource: “There’s 7.2 million acres of kudzu in the south that’s absolutely good to no one,” said Mizell. “It grows a foot a day, 60 feet a season and can be harvested twice a year and not even hurt the stand.”
Labels: Kudzu
A new bill in the Montana Legislature aims to make it easier for Montana farmers and ranchers to produce biodiesel fuel from oil-seed crops like camelina and canola.House Bill 415 would provide regulation for special fuel users who produce biodiesel fuel.
The US Air Force (USAF) is launching a new synthetic fuels programme to fly its fleet on a jet fuel mix that contains biofuel.The service is working toward an ultimate goal of certifying its fleet to use "hydro-treated renewable jet fuel" (HRJ) by about 2013.HRJs are biofuels derived from oils and fats, which can come from products such as animal fat, jatropha and camelina oil and algae.
Labels: Anaerobic Digestion, Biogas, Waste
The Wales Biomass Centre is an umbrella name for the various energy crop projects currently being undertaken by the research staff at Cardiff University’s Llysdinam Field Centre.
BICAL was established to provide renewable and profitable diversification for farmers and landowners, through supplying growers with Miscanthus planting material, developing a wide range of end use markets and providing contractual and crop marketing support.
Labels: Miscanthus
Labels: Anaerobic Digestion, Electricity, Waste
Labels: Miscanthus
Giant Miscanthus, a hybrid grass that can grow 13 feet high, may be a valuable renewable fuel source for the future, researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign say.
Labels: Miscanthus
Labels: Miscanthus
This post will try to present all the questions and answers for gasification technology in general and biomass gasification in particular:
Florida-based Biomass Investment Group (BIG), is embarking on a project using Arundo donax as an energy crop that will be grown on 20,000 acres (8000ha). The biomass will be converted into bio-oil, a heavy fuel oil, via a fast-pyrolysis process . This carbon-neutral oil will then be used in a power plant that will provide electricity to some 80,000 Floridian households.
Labels: Arundo donax
Labels: Arundo donax
South Carolina economic developer Joseph James helped form the South Carolina Biomass Council and chairs the feedstock committee, which is looking at a variety of feedstocks for the Southeast.
Labels: Arundo donax
An interesting document about Arundo donax from Biomass Research and Development initiative (BRDI) entitled
Labels: Arundo donax
Arundo donax is used for several purpose which includes:
Labels: Arundo donax
Labels: Arundo donax
Labels: bioplastics
Labels: bioplastics
Labels: Miscanthus
Labels: Arundo donax
Labels: Arundo donax, Miscanthus
Labels: Kudzu
Labels: Kudzu
Labels: Miscanthus
Labels: Arundo donax
A new company has been launched to take forward an energy-from-waste it claims could eventually see renewable energy plants developed at a cost as low as £250,000 per MW of capacity, writes James Cartledge.
AFC Energy has struck a deal to supply its alkaline fuel cells to energy-from-waste firm Waste2Tricity, which wants to use the technology to develop highly efficient gasification plants.
The National Grid of the UK has called for a multi-billion pound investment in anaerobic digestion and gasification facilities to turn biodegradable waste streams including food waste and wood waste into biogas to heat up to half of the UK's homes.
UK households will face escalating electricity bills or peak-time power cuts by 2015, according to John Constable, director of policy and research at the Renewable Energy Foundation. Writing in the Guardian newspaper recently, Constable warned that the UK faces a significant shortage in electric generation capacity within six years and that price hikes or power cuts are likely.
An excellent site for the gasification domain...provides lots of useful data, insights and statistics
There are more than 140 gasification plants operating worldwide. Nineteen of those plants are located in the United States. (See Existing Gasification Plants in the U.S). Worldwide gasification capacity is projected to grow 70 percent by 2015, with 80 percent of the growth occurring in Asia. (See World Syngas Capacity Growth).
"Pricing for our Biomass Gasification plant is $7.0 million for a 5 MW plant - FOB Lubbock, Texas. This price is for the Biomass Gasification plant only and does not include engineering, permitting, legal, utility interconnect, or other related costs."
A very detailed post from Gopinath's Blog on biomass gasification technologies and processes.
Here's an interesting article by a gasification enthusiast why biomass gasification rocks, especially for home-scale systems.
Here's an interesting blog post @ Energy Balance that analyses biomass gasification process. One interesting insight is as follows:
One such is large scale biomass gasification plants is gasification in the form of plasma arcs. The very high temperatures created in a plasma arc reduce matter to its basic elements, and they do this remarkably cleanly which avoids the production of the majority of the unwanted combustion products which bedevil so many other waste to energy technologies requiring huge cost to remove and imposing high parasitic loads on the plant itself.
Clean Gasification Technology Critical to Meeting the Nations Energy Needs
The $25-million provincially funded BC Bioenergy Network is awarding almost $5 million in funding to two biomass pilot projects. “These pilot projects will help to further strengthen British Columbia’s environmental leadership, long-term competitiveness and electricity self-sufficiency,” said Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources Minister Blair Lekstrom. “By converting wood waste into clean energy, these projects will help ensure that we meet our province’s future energy demands while at the same time supporting economic growth and job creation.”
In order to supply continuous power to the far-flung IT Parks and Special Economic Zones across the country, AllGreen Energy is setting up biomass-based renewable energy projects in India.
Canadian tissue manufacturer Kruger Products Ltd. plans to install a biomass gasification system at its tissue mill in New Westminster, British Columbia. Vancouver, British Columbia-based Nexterra Energy Corp. will supply the gasification system, which will convert biomass into a clean-burning synthesis gas that will be used to offset the use of natural gas at the facility.
A new co-operation agreement for the Chalmers University of Technology gasifier has been entered into with boiler manufacturer Metso Power. The agreement, which also includes Göteborg Energi and Akademiska Hus, will reinforce the research project with additional funding of SEK 10 million and will mark the start of commercialisation of the gasification technology that is currently being demonstrated at Chalmers.
Quebec-based Enerkem Inc. announced it has initiated start-up operations at its commercial-scale syngas-to-ethanol/methanol plant in Westbury, Quebec.
Millions of farmers in Indonesia could benefit from a simple gas stove which uses small scale rice husk gassification technology, turning rice husk waste into efficient fuel. This is an abundant farm waste in the country which produces about 58 million tons of rice a year.
Iowa State University’s research on gasification technologies for the ethanol industry got a boost this winter in the form of a $2.37 million grant from the Iowa Power Fund. The research aims to create systems that produce process heat from clean biomass-derived synthesis gas. Ethanol plants could use these sytems to replace natural gas usage. Another dimension of the research aims to improve the process of making ethanol from the syngas produced by biomass gasification.
Jan, 2009
Researchers push gasification pyrolysis as a means to more affordably process wood and other substances into biofuel
For most of the “clean energy” startups, the big question is whether the company’s prototype will still work efficiently when scaled up to industrial proportions. But for IST Energy in Waltham, MA, the question was how to scale down a waste gasification plant until it fit inside a standard cargo container, a space roughly 30 feet by 8 feet by 8.5 feet.
Rice husk gasification can now be done in a continuous mode with the latest design of a continuous-flow down-draft rice husk gasifier. Instead of using a dual reactor, continuous firing can be achieved using a single reactor. With this development, a more convenient and lower cost rice husk technology can be made available to people who wish to use rice husks as fuel as a replacement for the high-cost LPG fuel.
Here's some interesting data:
Torrefaction, a process commonly used to dry and roast coffee beans, may soon become mainstream, as traditional biomass and coal may soon be playing second string to torrefied feedstocks.
This blog will have regular updates on the latest breakthroughs and innovations in bio-based products